[0001] The present invention relates to papermaking, and more particularly to wet-end additives
to papermaking furnish.
[0002] In the manufacture of paper an aqueous cellulosic suspension or slurry is formed
into a paper sheet. The cellulosic slurry is generally diluted to a consistency (percent
dry weight of solids in the slurry) of less than 1 percent, and often below 0.5 percent
ahead of the paper machine, while the finished sheet must have less the 6 weight percent
water. Hence the dewatering aspects of papermaking are extremely important to the
efficiency and cost of the manufacture.
[0003] The dewatering method of the least cost in the process is drainage, and thereafter
more expensive methods are used, for instance vacuum, pressing, felt blanket blotting
and pressing, evaporation and the like, and in practice a combination of such methods
are employed to dewater, or cry, the sheet to the desired water content. Since drainage
is both the first dewatering method employed and the least expensive, improvement
in the efficiency of drainage will decrease the amount of water required to be removed
by other methods and hence improve the overall efficiency of dewatering and reduce
the cost thereof.
[0004] Another aspect of papermaking that is extremely important to the efficiency and cost
of the manufacture is retention of furnish components on and within the fiber mat
being formed during papermaking. A papermaking furnish contains generally particles
that range in size from about the 2 to 3 millimeter size of cellulosic fibers, to
fillers at a few microns, and to colloids. Within this range are cellulosic fines,
mineral fillers (employed to increase opacity, brightness and other paper characteristics)
and other small particles that generally, without the inclusion of one or more retention
aids, would in significant portion pass through the spaces (pores) between the cellulosic
fibers in the fiber mat being formed during papermaking.
[0005] One method of improving the retention of cellulosic fines, mineral fillers and other
furnish components on the fiber mat in the use of a coagulant/flocculant retention
system, added ahead of the paper machine. In such a system there is first added a
coagulant, for instance an inorganic coagulant such as alum (aluminum sulfate), or
a cationic starch, or a low molecular weight synthetic cationic polymer to the furnish.
Such a coagulant generally reduces the negative surface charges present on the particles
in the furnish, particularly the surface charges of the cellulosic fines and the mineral
fillers, and thereby accomplishes some degree of agglomeration of such particles.
After the addition of such coagulant, and after the various significant shear steps
of the refining process, there is then added a flocculant. A flocculant generally
acts by bridging between particles. A flocculant such as a synthetic anionic polymer
is generally fixed onto the furnish particles through the previously added coagulant
material which, having been to some extent adsorbed onto the anionic surfaces within
the furnish, provides sites of attachment for the anionic flocculant. The synthetic
anionic flocculants generally have a thin, flexible nature, and hence are added at
a point providing sufficient time lapse before sheet formation to permit the polymer
to reach the attachment surfaces, but not so long as to allow polymer reconfiguration.
For similar reasons, such retention systems are deemed shear sensitive, and significant
shear conditions are to be avoided at least after the flocculant addition.
[0006] As noted above, the flocculant of such a coagulant/flocculant retention system bridges
the particles and/or agglomerates already formed by the coagulant, from one surface
to another, binding the particles into large agglomerates. The presence of such large
agglomerates in the furnish as the fiber mat of paper sheet is being formed increases
retention. The agglomerates are filtered out of the water onto the fiber web, where
unagglorerated particles would, to a great extent, pass through such paper web.
[0007] A flocculated agglomerate generally does not interfere with the drainage of the fiber
mat to the extent that would occur if the furnish were gelled or contained an amount
of gelatinous material. Nonetheless when such flocs are filtered by the fiber web
the pores of the web are generally reduced to a degree, reducing drainage efficiency
therefrom. Thus the increased retention provided by a retention system may be achieved
with a concommitant lessening of drainage efficiency.
[0008] Another type of retention system is described in U.S. Patent Nos. 4,753,710 and 4,913,775,
inventors Langley et al., issued respectively June 28, 1988, and April 3, 1990. In
brief, such method adds to an aqueous cellulosic papermaking suspension first a high
molecular weight linear cationic polymer, followed by subjecting the suspension to
high shear conditions, and then adds bentonite prior to sheet formation.
[0009] A further type of retention system is described in "Microparticles in Wet End Chemistry",
Kurt Moberg, Retention and Drainage Short Course, 1989, Washington, D.C., TAPPI Press,
Altanta, Georgia. In brief, such "microparticle" system starts with the addition of
cationic starch, followed by the additional of colloidal silica.
[0010] Greater retention of fines and fillers permits, for a given grade of paper, a reduction
in the cellulosic fiber content of such paper. As pulps of less quality are employed
to reduce papermaking costs, the retention aspect of papermaking becomes even more
important because the fines content of such lower quality pulps is greater generally
than that of higher quality pulps.
[0011] Greater retention of fines, fillers and other slurry components reduces the amount
of such substances that are lost to the white water, and hence reduces the amount
of material wastes, the cost of waste disposal, and the adverse environmental effects
therefrom.
[0012] Another important characteristic of a given papermaking process is the formation
of the paper sheet produced. Formation is determined by the variance in the light
transmission within a paper sheet, and a high variance is indicative of poor formation.
As retention increases to a high level, for instance a retention level of 80 or 90
percent, the formation parameter generally abruptly declines from good formation to
poor formation. It has been at least theoretically postulated that as the retention
mechanisms of a given papermaking process shift from floc filtration to floc adsorption,
the deleterious effect on formation, at high retention levels, will diminish. A good
combination of retention and formation is attributed to the use of bentonite in U.S.
Patent No. 4,913,775, noted above. Improved dewatering and a larger fraction of retention
by adsorption rather than filtration, is attributed to the cationic starch/colloidal
silica system in "Microparticles in Wet End Chemistry" noted above.
[0013] It is generally desirable to reduce the amount of material employed for given purposes
in a papermaking process, if such reduction can be achieved without significantly
diminishing the result sought. Such add-on reductions may realize both a material
cost savings and handling and processing benefits. The reduction in concentration
of an add-on employed may in instances advantageously diminish various deleterious
effects of such add-on. For instance, high levels of alum may result in deposit problems
on the machine, and be detrimental to dry strength properties.
[0014] It is also advantageous to employ additives that can be delivered to the paper machine
without undue problems, if such additives are available for the given purpose. Additives
that are easily dissolved or dispersed in water reduce the energy and expense of delivering
them to the paper machine and provide a more reliable uniformity of feed.
[0015] The present invention provides a papermaking process in which the paper product,
that is paper or paperboard or the like, is made by the general steps of forming an
aqueous cellulosic slurry, subjecting such slurry to at least one shear stage, and
dewatering such slurry to form a paper product sheet, which process is characterized
by unique steps concerning the sequence and point of addition of certain additives.
The process includes the addition of a mineral filler and a cationic charge-biasing
species (cationic species) to the slurry prior to at least one shear stage, which
additions and points of addition are also generally known for papermaking processes.
The dewatering of the slurry to form a paper product sheet generally comprises draining
the slurry and then drying the sheet formed thereby.
[0016] The unique steps of the present invention are the addition of an anionic flocculant
to the slurry ahead of at least one shear stage, but subsequent to the addition of
the mineral filler and cationic charge-biasing agent, and the addition of a certain
microparticle after the last shear stage but prior to sheet formation. The addition
of an anionic flocculant is known generally in papermaking processes, but in the process
of the present invention it is added before at least one of the shear stages, unlike
conventional processes in which high shear is to be avoided after anionic flocculant
addition. The certain microparticle is an inorganic, cationic source of aluminum,
described in more detail below. This microparticle is added to provide, together with
the anionic flocculant, retention performance.
[0017] The application of a shear stage after the anionic flocculant has been charged to
the slurry, and hence has effectuated floc formation, is discussed in more detail
below. Also discussed and demonstrated below is the efficacy of the anionic flocculant
and certain microparticle combination in providing retention performance.
Preferred Embodiments of the Invention
[0018] The treatment of an aqueous cellulosic slurry with a cationic charge-biasing species,
for instance cationic starch, is a wet-end papermaking treatment in itself known in
the field. For instance, in "Microparticles in Wet End Chemistry", noted above, substantial
retention effect is attributed to cationic starch alone in alkaline wet end use, and
cationic starch is the first of the two-component microparticle system described therein.
Alum, another cationic charge-biasing agent, is also known for wet end use, particularly
as an adjunct to other retention aids. Anionic flocculants are also in themselves
known as wet end retention aids. For instance, anionic polyacrylamide is well known
for use as a retention aid in cellulosic slurries pretreated with alum or a low molecular
weight cationic resin Even the use of microparticles is known in wet end papermaking
chemistry.
[0019] The present invention departs from the known uses of anionic flocculants and microparticles.
Instead of the known coagulant/shear/flocculant sequence, or the known cationic/shear/microparticle
sequence, in the present invention both a cationic charge-biasing species (which may
be a coagulant) and an anionic flocculant are charged to the furnish before a shear
stage of the papermaking process.
[0020] The present invention also departs from the typical uses of aluminum sources as pre-flocculant
coagulant additives. While aluminum sources may be employed in the present invention
as the pre-flocculant coagulant additive, an aluminum source may herein be the microparticle
species which is added after the flocculant, and after the anionic-flocculant-containing
slurry is subjected to a shear stage. Such aluminum source that may be suitable as
the microparticle species in the present process includes alum (aluminum sulfate),
sodium aluminate, polyaluminum chloride, and the like. In preferred embodiment polyaluminum
chloride is the microparticle species employed.
[0021] In preferred embodiments, the present invention's unique combination of addition
points and sequences provides a advantageous high degree of retention of fines and
fillers. Such high retention permits, for a given grade of paper, a reduction in the
cellulosic fiber content of such paper, reducing papermaking costs and reducing the
cellulosic fiber consumption of papermaking. Such high retention also reduces the
amount of such fines and fillers that are lost to the white water, and hence reduces
the material wastes, the waste disposal costs and the adverse environmental effects
from such material wastes.
[0022] The present invention may also provide other advantages to the papermaking industry,
such as improved dewatering and improved sheet properties such as formation and porosity
and the like.
The Filler
[0023] The present invention is applicable to papermaking processes that use a mineral filler,
or combinations of mineral fillers. Such mineral fillers include alkaline carbonates,
such as calcium carbonate, clay, such as kaoline clay, talc, titanium dioxide, and
the like. Such mineral fillers are particulate materials and their incorporation into
the paper sheet is desired for the purpose of scattering light and hence increasing
the opacity of such sheet. Calcium carbonate is a commonly used filler, and its use
is generally limited to the neutral and alkaline papermaking systems because it dissolves
in low pH systems. Titanium dioxide is generally more expensive than the other mineral
fillers in common use, but since it has a higher refractive index than most of the
other paper sheet components, it is often employed when high opacity and brightness
are desired.
The Cellulosic Slurry
[0024] The present process is believed applicable to all grades and types of paper products
that contain the mineral fillers described herein, and further applicable to all types
of pulps including, without limitation, chemical and semichemical pulps, including
sulfate and sulfite pulps from both hard and softs woods, thermo-mechanical pulps,
mechanical pulps and ground wood pulps. It is believed, however, that the advantages
of the present process are best achieved when the pulp employed is of the chemical
pulp type, particularly a neutral or alkaline chemical pulp. The pulp is suspended
in an aqueous slurry, often referred to herein as a cellulosic slurry, which generally
contains at least about 99 weight percent water (1 percent consistency) and often
contains 99.5 weight percent water (0.5 percent consistency) or more. The term "consistency"
as used generally and herein refers to the weight percentage of material in a cellulosic
slurry other than water.
[0025] The cellulosic slurry of the type useful for the process of the present invention
will have its cellulosic content augmented with mineral filler. The amount of such
mineral filler generally employed in a papermaking stock is from about 10 to about
30 parts by weight of the filler, as CaCO₃, per hundred parts by weight of dry pulp
in the slurry. The amount of such filler, however, may at times be as low as about
5, or even about 2, parts by weight, same basis. The amount of such filler may also
be as high as about 40, or even 50, parts by weight, same basis.
[0026] The water employed in making up such cellulosic slurry (the process water) typically
has significant hardness. The process water quality standards vary with the type of
pulp used and the quality of the product being produced. For instance, a maximum total
hardness, as CaCO₃, of about 100 ppm (100 mg/L) is a typical standard for fine paper,
Kraft paper (bleached), and soda and sulfate pulp, while a standard of 200 ppm total
hardness, as CaCO₃, is suitable and commonly encountered for groundwood pulps and
blends of bleached hardwood Kraft/softwood Kraft.
[0027] The cellulosic slurry should be relatively dilute at the time of the addition of
the anionic flocculant. A consistency of no more than about 3 percent is a reasonable
degree of dilution, and a slurry consistency of 1.0 percent or less, at the point
of anionic flocculant addition, is generally preferred. Thereafter in typical papermaking
processes the cellulosic slurry would not generally be concentrated prior to sheet
formation. Moreover, it would generally not be desirable to increase the slurry consistency
to a higher percentage before or at the point of microparticle addition.
The Shear
[0028] The cellulosic slurry is inevitably subjected to some degree of agitation throughout
the papermaking process. Such general processing agitation can be, and herein is distinguished
as one of two types of agitation. Such agitation is either modified agitation or shear
agitation. Shear agitation occurs at processing points or stations referred to herein
as "shear" or "high shear" stages. A typical cellulosic slurry will be subjected to
such a modified agitation punctuated with one or more shear stages. The papermaking
stations that provide a shear stage are generally a centriscreen (centrifugal cleaning
devices used to remove coarse solids from the slurry prior to sheet formation, also
known as a selectifier),centrifugal pumps, conventional mixing pumps and fan pumps.
It is well known in the papermaking field that such shear stages break down flocs
formed by flocculating agents, and hence it is the general practice to add the flocculating
agent after the final shear stage encountered by the cellulosic slurry. It is convenient
for the present process to have the shear or high shear provided by one or more of
the shear stages inherent in the given papermaking process, and the addition points
of the additives used in the present invention may be selected in view of the shear
stage points in the given papermaking process. Thus the shear required for the present
process may be provided by a shearing device already present in the papermaking apparatus.
It is of course possible, and may at times be desirable, to include in the normal
apparatus another shear device for the sole purpose of providing the shear required
for the present invention's process. For instance, for a given papermaking set-up,
there may be some reason it is desirable to add an anionic flocculant after the last
of the shear stages in that set-up; since the slurry must be subjected to shear after
such flocculant addition, a shear device must be added to the normal equipment at
a point subsequent to flocculant addition. Such an additional shear device preferably
is one that acts centrifugally, such as a fan pump, mixing pump, and preferably a
centriscreen type of device.
The Cationic Charge-biasing Species
[0029] As noted above, a cationic species is added to the slurry to at least partially neutralize
charge on the surfaces of the filler and fines, and possibly other surfaces within
the slurry, such as the cellulosic fibers larger than the fines. Most all of solids
in nature have negative surface charges, including the surfaces of cellulosic fines
and mineral fillers. The anionic flocculant employed in the present process generally
will not be substantive to such fines and filler unless the fines and filler are pretreated
with a cationic species that at least partially neutralizes such surface charge. Suitable
cationic species for such partial charge neutralization include such diverse materials
as relatively low molecular weight cationic starch or other cationic polymer, such
as synthetic cationic polymers, and cationic coagulant-type materials. Such cationic
species should provide cationic patches or anchoring points for the anionic flocculant
subsequently added to the slurry.
[0030] Cationic starch is a starch material that contains tertiary amino and/or quaternary
ammonium salt groups, usually at a low degree of substitution. A cationic starch may
be derived from any of a number of sources, and a commonly used cationic starch is
potato starch. Cationic starch is self-retaining in the cellulosic slurry; that is,
it is substantive to the fines and mineral filler surfaces. In an alkaline papermaking
system, a cationic starch will have a degree of flocculating activity in that cationic
starch has sufficient molecular weight and stereo characteristics to provide not only
anionic charge neutralization, but also some degree of bridging. Thus in an alkaline
papermaking system, cationic starch is to a limited degree itself a retention aid.
Cationic starch is also used in papermaking as a wet-end binder additive.
[0031] Relatively low molecular weight cationic synthetic polymers may also be used as the
cationic species. Such polymers preferably should have a weight average molecular
weight of no more than about 500,000, and preferably no more than about 200,000, or
even about 100,000. In further preferred embodiment, such synthetic cationic polymer
should have a molecular weight within the range of from about 2,000 to about 100,000.
[0032] The charge densities of such low molecular weight cationic synthetic polymers are
relatively high. These charge densities typically range from about 4 to about 8 equivalents
of cationic nitrogen per kilogram of polymer. The mole percent charge for cationic
polymers such as epichlorohydrin/dimethyl amine copolymer or diallyldimethylammonium
chloride polymer is about 100 percent . While such high charge density polymers are
suitable for use as the cationic charge-biasing species, some polymers with a lesser
charge density may also be suitable. For instance, an acrylamide/diallyldimethylammonium
chloride copolymer may be used as the cationic charge-biasing species, particularly
if the mole percent of cationic mer units is at least about 50 percent.
[0033] A cationic mer unit of a synthetic polymer typically contains a tertiary amine or
quaternary ammonium salt functionality. Suitable synthetic cationic polymers include
epichlorohydrin/dimethylamine polymers, polydiallyldimethylammonium chloride, polyethylene
imines, and the like. Such polymers preferably are substantially linear, although
some degree of cross-linking and some degree of amphoteric nature does not in and
of itself exclude a cationic polymer from use as the cationic species of the process
of the present invention. Such types of cationic synthetic polymers are generally
all water soluble, and can be categorized as coagulants generally.
[0034] Coagulants generally are materials that reduce the surface charge on solids, and
more particularly the negative (anionic) surface charge on solids suspended in aqueous
medium. A coagulant is generally employed in various systems for the purpose of causing
suspended solids to settle out of the aqueous medium, and hence it is generally the
goal to so reduce the surface charge to the point where Van der Waals forces can predominate
and cause agglomeration of the suspended particles. To achieve such agglomeration
and settling, it generally is desirable to provide high intensity mixing to further
promote coagulation and settling.
[0035] As noted above, relatively low molecular weight cationic polymers are considered
coagulants. In addition, aluminum salts and iron salts are common coagulants, for
instance alum (aluminum sulfate, usually available as a hydrate), sodium aluminate,
polyaluminum chloride, ferric chloride, ferric sulfate, copperas (FeSO₄·3H₂O), and
the like. The metal salt coagulants also function as flocculants. Hydrolysis of such
metal salts leads to the formation of insoluble gelatinous aluminum or ferric hydroxide,
and they are sensitive to pH, particularly at low concentration levels. Hence while
coagulant-type materials are effective anionic charge neutralizing agents, and hence
can be used as cationic species in the process of the present invention, cationic
starch and synthetic cationic polymers are generally a better choice.
[0036] The main purpose for the addition of the cationic species (cationic charge-biasing
species) prior to the addition of the anionic flocculant is the partial neutralization
of the anionic surface charges present in the slurry, which provides cationic sites
for flocculant adsorption. Since the cationic charge-biasing species is generally
a low molecular weight material, the effects of high shear applied after such cationic
sites are formed are generally reversible. Therefore a shear stage between the addition
of the cationic species and the anionic flocculant will have little to no effect on
the process.
[0037] Since the cationic species is to be added ahead of the anionic flocculant, and the
anionic flocculant is to be added ahead of a shear stage, at least one shear stage
must follow the addition of the anionic flocculant As noted elsewhere herein, the
shear stage following the flocculant addition may be a normal part of the given papermaking
process, or an auxiliary shear device may be added to the process for the purpose
of providing post-flocculant addition shear to the process.
[0038] The amount of cationic species that preferably is used in the process of the present
invention is partly dependent on the cationic demand of the cellulosic slurry prior
to addition of the cationic species. The cationic demand of the slurry is the amount
of cationic species required for full anionic surface charge neutralization (to achieve
a zero zeta potential), which in turn is dependent upon the amount of fines, mineral
filler and other anionic surface charged particles in the slurry, and the nature and
amount of other additives that may be employed for other purposes. As noted above,
it is not generally necessary, and in fact at times undesirable, to employ sufficient
cationic species to fully satisfy the cationic demand of the cellulosic species. Nonetheless,
for a given amount of a given anionic flocculant, the cationic species pretreatment
of the cellulosic slurry preferably is somewhat proportional to the cationic demand
of the slurry. That is, to achieve a reasonably consistent retention performance,
a high cationic demand slurry will require a greater amount of cationic species than
a slurry with a low cationic demand.
[0039] The cationic species generally would be considered a cationic furnish component,
and as indicated elsewhere herein it is advantageous to use a cationic furnish component
that enhances the furnish in other characteristics, provided of course that such component
have the desired charge-biasing activity at the level used.
[0040] In general, for a cationic starch or other cationic species with a similar charge
density, an amount of cationic species of from about 0.05 to about 2.5 parts by weight
per 100 parts by weight of dry slurry solids in the cellulosic slurry is both efficient
and practical, and for most slurries an amount of film about 0.1 to about 2.0 weight
percent, same basis, is sufficient. For cationic species having higher charge densities,
for instance synthetic cationic polymers as mentioned above, which can easily be prepared
with charge densities twice that of cationic starch, a lesser amount , for instance
from about 0.05 to about 1.0 weight percent, same basis, will suffice.
[0041] Since the cationic species is added to the cellulosic slurry to provide a charge-biasing
effect without slurry coagulation, a reasonable additive level can be determined by
a colloidal titration test often used in the field to determine the cationic demand
of a slurry. In this test, an excess amount of a cationic polyelectrolyte is added
to a sample of the slurry. The excess cationic material is then back-titrated with
an anionic polyelectrolyte to a colorimetric endpoint. The amount of cationic material
required to neutralize the slurry can then be calculated.
[0042] By "charge-biasing" activity is meant herein the partial neutralization of anionic
surface charge within a slurry. Hence the cationic species has a cationic charge-biasing
activity in the process of the present invention.
[0043] Anther polymeric substance also employed as a cationic binder in papermaking process
is urea/formaldehyde resins, and such polymers are, like the cationic starch binder,
suitable for use as the cationic species in the present process. Also useable are
relatively low molecular weight dry strength resins that are more cationic than nonionic.
[0044] When the papermaking stock has a high cationic demand and/or contains significant
amounts of pitch, a synthetic cationic polymer is often used to supplement common
cationic binders. Such supplementary cationic polymers may be within the molecular
weight range of from about 50,000 to about 400,000, although polymers having molecular
weights as low as about 10,000, or as high as about 1, or even 2, million may at times
be employed.
[0045] The term "cationic charge-biasing species", or its synonym (as used herein) "cationic
species" thus includes combinations of various types of cationic species.
The Anionic Flocculant
[0046] A flocculant agglomerates suspended particles generally by a bridging mechanism,
bridging from one surface to another and binding the individual particles into large
aggregates. While alum and iron salts, as mentioned above, are considered common flocculants,
for the purpose of the present invention the anionic flocculant should be a relatively
high molecular weight polymer having a degree of anionic pendant groups. By polymer
is meant herein, with respect to the anionic flocculant, an organic polymer having
a carbon chain backbone.
[0047] Anionic polymers often have a carboxyl group (-COOH) in their structure, which may
be immediately pendant from the polymer backbone or pendant through typically an alkalene
group, particularly an alkalene group of few carbons. In aqueous medium, such carboxyl
groups ionize to provide to the polymer structure negative (anionic) charges, except
in low pH mediums.
[0048] Anionic polymers suitable for use as anionic flocculants, for instance anionic polymers
of relatively high molecular weights, are not comprised wholly of mer units having
pendant carboxyl groups, but instead are comprised of a combination of nonionic and
anionic mer units, and may even contain a degree of cationic mer units as long as,
between the anionic and cationic mer units, the anionic mer units predominate.
[0049] Mer units, as such term is used herein, refers to a portion of the polymer structure
that contains two adjacent backbone carbons and any groups pendant from such carbons.
For polymers prepared from ethylenically unsaturated monomers, a mer unit is comparable
to the monomer molecule, with the loss of course of the ethylenic unsaturation. Hence
polymer mer units are often, as herein, defined in terms of the ethylenically unsaturated
monomer that did, or could have, given rise to the polymer mer unit.
[0050] Since nonionic mer units, particularly nonionic mer units with pendant polar groups,
may exhibit the same flocculating properties as anionic mer units in aqueous medium,
the incorporation of such nonionic mer units into the anionic flocculant is not uncommon.
A particularly advantageous nonionic mer unit is the (meth)acrylamide mer unit.
[0051] Anionic polyacrylamides having relatively high molecular weights are well known as
highly satisfactory flocculating agents. Such anionic polyacrylamides contain a combination
of (meth)acrylamide mer units and (meth)acrylic acid mer units, the latter of which
may be derived from the incorporation of (meth)acrylic acid monomer during polymer
preparation, or alternatively by the hydrolysis of some (meth)acrylamide mer units
after polymer preparation, or even by a combination of such methods.
[0052] The anionic charge density of suitable anionic flocculants, in terms of mole percentages
of anionic mer units, should be at least 2, or about 5, mole percent of anionic mer
units. in more preferred embodiment, the anionic charge density of the anionic flocculant
should be from about 10 to about 60, or even 70, mole percent of anionic mer units.
[0053] The anionic flocculant should have a weight average molecular weight of at least
500,000, and preferably the molecular weight is above 1,000,000, and may advantageously
be above 5,000,000, for instance in the range of from about 5,000,000 to about 20,000,000
or higher. The anionic flocculant is substantially linear; it may be wholly linear
or it can be slightly cross-linked provided that its structure is still substantially
linear in comparison to the typical globular structure of cationic starch.
[0054] When the anionic flocculant employed is an anionic polyacrylamide, the molecular
weight, in terms of reduced specific viscosity ("RSV"), as determined in 1 N sodium
nitrate aqueous solution, using 0.045 weight percent of the polymer, may be as low
as about 10, or at times even 5, and as high as about 60. In preferred embodiment
the RSV of such anionic polyacrylamide is from about 10 to about 50, and more preferably
from about 20 to about 50.
[0055] Other sources of a carboxyl group that may be present in an anionic polymer include
mer units of ethyl acrylic acid, crotonic acid, itaconic acid, maleic acid, salts
of any of such acids, anhydrides of any diacids, and mer units that have pendant groups
covertible to ionizable carboxylate groups, and the like. Nonetheless the use of polymers
prepared from (meth)acrylamide and (meth)acrylic acid, or prepared from (meth)acrylamide
followed by partial hydrolysis, is generally most convenient, such polymers being
easily synthesized and readily available commercially.
[0056] The anionic flocculant may also be a polymer that contains ionizable anionic groups
such as sulfonate, phosphonate and the like, and combinations of any of the ionizable
anionic groups mentioned herein.
[0057] Some degree of amphoteric nature in the anionic flocculant is not excluded herein,
provided of course that such cationic mer unit content of such a polymer is not predominant.
When the anionic flocculant is a polyampholyte, in preferred embodiment the mole percentage
of cationic mer units therein does not exceed about 15 mole percent, and hence in
preferred embodiment the mole percentage of cationic mer units in the anionic flocculant
is from 0 to about 15 mole percent. In further preferred embodiment, where some amount
of cationic mer units are present in the anionic flocculant, the mole percentage of
anionic mer units is at least twice the mole percentage of such cationic mer units.
[0058] The anionic polymer may also be slightly cross linked, for instance by the incorporation
of multifunctional mer units such as N,N-methylenebisacrylamide or by other cross-linking
means. A degree of cross-linking that renders the polymer configuration immutably
globular, or approaching such stage, is however not believed suitable for an anionic
flocculant.
[0059] Mer units that provide ionizable sulfonate groups to a polymer, and hence may be
included in the anionic flocculant, include without limitation sulfonated styrene
and sulfonated alkyl N-substituted (meth)acrylamide. The latter includes mer units
such as 2-acrylamidomethylpropane, which is commercially available as a polymerizable
monomer. The latter also includes mer units formed by post-polymerization derivatization
techniques, such as those described in U.S. Patent Nos. 4,762,894 (Fong et al.) issued
August 9, 1988, 4,680,339 (Fong) issued July 14, 1987, 4,795,789 (Fong) issued January
3, 1989, and 4,604,431 (Fong et al.) issued August 5, 1986, all of which are hereby
incorporated hereinto by reference.
[0060] The preparation of polymers having ionizable phosphonate groups is described in U.S.
Patent No. 4,678,840 (Fong et al.) issued on July 7, 1987, which is incorporated hereinto
by reference.
[0061] It is believed that any substantially linear, anionic polymeric flocculant that is
suitable for use in wet end papermaking applications is also suitable for use as the
anionic flocculant of the process of the present invention, and such polymers again
also include polymers having a minor degree of cross-linking and/or a minor quantity
of cationic mer units providing to the polymer some minor degree of amphoteric nature.
The Microparticle
[0062] The microparticle employed in the process of the present invention is an inorganic,
cationic source of aluminum which, upon dispersion in an aqueous medium, has a particle
size no larger than about 1,000 nm (0.001 mm), and typically no larger than about
500 nm (0.0005 mm). In preferred embodiment the microparticle has a particle size
no larger than 300 nm (0.0003 mm). Such microparticle must be active in neutralizing
anionic surface charge.
[0063] By particle size is meant herein, unless expressly indicated otherwise, the longest
diameter of a particle.
[0064] A colloid has been defined at times as particulate matter, in a liquid medium, the
particles of which are about, or less than, 100 nm. Other definitions of colloidal
matter may place the upper ceiling as to particle size at a larger diameter, up to
about 10,000 nm (0.01 mm). The latter definition includes particles that are larger
than 100 nm and hence are visible by light microscope. (Below 100 nm an electron microscope
must be used for detection ). The microparticle used in the process of the present
invention thus may be deemed wholly colloidal under the latter broad definition of
colloidal matter, while the microparticle's maximum particle size limitations do not
exclude particles that are visible by light microscope.
[0065] The microparticle may, but need not, be a substantially rigid particle in aqueous
medium. The microparticle may be much smaller than the maximum size limitations, for
instance about 5 nm, although a minimum particle size of about 1 nm, or even about
2 nm, is believed appropriate.
[0066] The microparticle of course should not be soluble in the aqueous medium in which
it is employed in the process of the present invention. The microparticle should retain
its particulate nature, as to particle size range, when present in water at a concentration
level as low as about 0.1 ppm, and preferably no more than about 5 weight percent
of the microparticle material should become solubilized in a neutral pH aqueous medium
at that concentration level during a time period of about 24 hours.
[0067] A source of aluminum as used herein means that the microparticle, as dispersed in
aqueous medium, contains at least about 5 weight percent aluminum, and preferably
at least about 10, or 15, weight percent aluminum.
[0068] Examples of microparticles that are inorganic, cationic sources of aluminum include,
without limitation, hydrolyzed or precipitated alum ("alum" as used herein mean aluminum
sulfate), polyaluminum chloride ("PAC"), polyaluminum sulfate ("PAS"), alum derivatized
SiO₂, polyaluminosilicate, sodium aluminate, and the like. In preferred embodiment
the microparticle is an aluminum salt of the type considered generally as coagulant
agents, such as alum, sodium aluminate, and PAC. In more preferred embodiment, the
microparticle is of the PAC type, particularly when the process employs as the anionic
flocculant an anionic polyacrylamide.
[0069] Polyaluminum chloride, also referred to at times as poly(aluminum chloride) and poly
aluminum chloride, or "PAC", is a partially hydrolyzed aluminum chloride, which may
incorporate a small amount of sulfate. A sulfate-containing PAC may have an approximate
empirical formula of Al(OH)
1.5(SO₄)
0.125Cl
1.25, and such a PAC is generally commercially available in aqueous solution form with
an aluminum content of about 10 weight percent, as Al₂O₃. The small amount of sulfate
contributes to the stability of PAC. PAC also includes partially hydrolyzed aluminum
chloride complex salt structures that do not contain sulfate, for instance basic aluminum
salts within the formula of Al
n(OH)
mX
3n-m wherein n is 1 to 20, X is a monovalent anion which for PAC would of course be the
Cl anion), m is a number smaller than 3n, and the chemical equivalent ratio Al/X is
from 1.5 to 6.0, which salts are described in Canadian Patent No. 759,363, May, 1967,
the contents of which are hereby incorporated hereinto by reference. PAC thus can
be, and herein is, defined as a complex salt structure that forms polymer ions, derived
from the partial hydrolysis of aluminum chloride, optionally with the incorporation
of some amount of sulfate. PAC may also be, and herein is, defined by the formula
of formula I:
Formula I Al
n(OH)
m(SO₄)
xCl
3n-(m+x)
wherein n is a number from about 1 to about 20, m is a number that is larger than
zero and less than 3n-x, and x is a number from zero to about 0.5n. In preferred embodiments,
m varies from about a numerical value of n to about 2n. Since the inclusion of sulfate
is for stability purposes generally, there seldom is reason for x to exceed a numerical
value of 0.2n.
Additive Addition Levels
[0070] A reasonably efficient anionic flocculant, such as a medium charge density, high
molecular weight (meth)acrylamide/(meth)acrylic acid copolymer, may be added to the
cellulosic slurry in the amount of from about 0.005 to about 0.20 parts by weight
per hundred parts by weight of dry slurry solids,
and preferably in the amount of from about 0.01 to about 0.1 parts by weight, same
basis. Generally a greater level of anionic flocculant may be required if a less efficient
flocculant is selected for use. Since generally there is little or no benefit in employing
a less efficient flocculant for use in any manner in a papermaking process, the extent
of augmentation required for a less efficient flocculant additive has not been investigated.
[0071] The amount of microparticle required after the floc formed by the anionic flocculant
has been disrupted by one or more shear stages is dependent upon the microparticle
selected. Given the use of a reasonably efficient anionic flocculant, added at recommended
levels, when polyaluminum chloride is selected as the microparticle the additive level
thereof may be as low as about 0.005 parts by weight per hundred parts by weight of
dry solids, and at times as low as 0.001 parts by weight same basis. The maximum additive
level for the microparticle in the process of the present invention for polyaluminum
chloride, and for other microparticles, is dependent in part on practical considerations.
For a microparticle that is extremely effective in the present process at very low
dosage levels, there is believed to be a performance peak that is reached while the
dosage is still very low. The performance peak dosage in any given system can of course
be exceeded, and for such a microparticle such dosage beyond the performance peak
is still relatively low. Nonetheless there generally is no practical reason to exceed
the dosage of the performance peak, and the diminishing of retention performance that
may occur when the performance peak dosage is exceeded is generally a good practical
reason for avoiding such excess microparticle. For polyaluminum chloride, and any
other microparticle of similar activity/dosage performance when used in the present
process, it is believed that the performance peak will occur within the dosage range
of from about 0.05 to about 0.20 parts by weight per hundred parts of dry solids,
althrough variations in performance peak dosages may arise from various papermaking
process parameters. For a microparticle that is effective at dosage levels higher
than that required for polyaluminum chloride, for instance the sodium aluminate microparticle,
the practical consideration dictating maximum dosage may be the desired add-on limit,
rather than a performance peak phenomenom. A reasonable additive dosage range for
sodium aluminate, and similarly active microparticles, may be from about 0.1 to about
5.0 parts by weight per hundred parts by weight dry solids. It is believed that microparticles
such as aluminum sulfate will provide activities similar to sodium aluminate when
used as the microparticle in the process of the present invention.
The Papermaking System
[0072] The process of the present invention is believed particularly useful for a neutral
to alkaline papermaking system, that is, a system in which the cellulosic slurry has
a pH of at least about 6.0 or higher. Such pH characteristic refers to the pH of the
slurry at least from the point of addition of the anionic flocculant through to the
point of sheet formation. More particularly, the pH of the cellulosic slurry may be
in the range of from about 6.0 to about 9.5, or preferably to about 9.0 or even 8.5.
[0073] As noted elsewhere, one particularly common filler is calcium carbonate, and the
pH environments for the slurry that are noted above are suitable for this filler.
[0074] Neutral pulping processes include neutral sulfite, neutral sulfite-semichemical,
and chemiground processes. Alkaline pulping processes include the Kraft and Kraft-semichemical
processes. The pH of the cellulosic slurry of course may be different from that of
the pulp employed by virtue of pH modifying additives.
[0075] Other additives may be charged to the cellulosic slurry without any substantial interference
with the activity of the sequential additives of the present process. Such other additives
include for instance sizing agents, such as alum and rosin, pitch control agents,
extenders such as anilex, biocides and the like. Such other additives generally should
be incorporated into the slurry at the time of addition of the anionic flocculant.
Moreover, since in preferred embodiment the cellulosic slurry should be at a neutral
or alkaline pH at the time the anionic flocculant is charged to the slurry, the selection
of such other additives preferably should be made with this slurry pH preference as
a limiting factor.
Test Method
[0076] The test method employed in the following examples and comparative examples is a
Britt Jar Test using a Britt CF Dynamic Dranage Jar developed by K.W. Britt of New
York State University. This apparatus generally consists of an upper chamber having
a capacity of about one liter and a bottom drainage chamber, the chambers being separated
by a support screen and a drainage screen. Below the drainage chamber is a downward
extending flexible tube equipped with a clamp for closure. The upper chamber is provided
with a variable speed, high torque moter equipped with a 2-inch 3-bladed propeller
to create controlled shear conditions in the upper chamber. The test was conducted
by placing a 750 ml. sample of the cellulosic stock in the upper chamber, and then
subjecting the stock sample to the following sequence:
Time |
Action |
0 seconds |
Commence shear stirring at 2,000 rpm. |
10 seconds |
Charge Additive #1 |
70 seconds |
Reduce stirring speed to 750 rpm. |
90 seconds |
Charge Additive #2. |
100 seconds |
Open the tube clamp to commence drainage from the jar, and continue drainage for 12
seconds. |
The Britt Jar filtrate collected during such 12 second drainage is generally a sample
of about 200 ml. The total solids present in such filtrate is then determined by passing
the filtrate simple through a preweighed filter pad which entraps solids even of colloidal
size. The filter pad is then dried and reweighed, and from such total solids determination
the consistency of such filtrate is calculated. The consistency of the filtrate sample
is compared to the consistency of a blank (filtrate of a sample run without either
Additive #1 or #2) to determine the "percent reduction in filtrate consistency" using
the following equation:

wherein R is the percent reduction in filtrate consistency, s is the sample consistency,
and b is the blank's consistency. The higher the percent reduction in filtrate consistency,
the greater is the retention level achieved by an additive or combination of additive
at the addition points and addition sequences used.
[0077] The specific Test Method described above simulates for Additive #1 a papermaking
process wherein the cellulosic slurry is subjected to a high shear stage subsequent
to the addition of material charged as Additive #1, and for Additive #2, a papermaking
process wherein no high shear is applied to the cellulosic slurry during or after
the addition of material charged as Additive #2. As shown in the following examples
and comparative examples, the sequence and addition points of additive charges is
an extremely important aspect of the process of the present invention.
The Test Stock
[0078] The Test Stock used in the following examples and comparative examples was a 50/50
weight ratio blend of bleached hardwood Krft/softwood Kraft pulp, separately beaten
to a Canadian Standard Freeness value range of from 340 to 380 C.F.S., and diluted
to an overall consistency (pulp dry solids and dry filler) of 0.5 percent. The dilution
water contained 200 ppm of calcium hardness, 152 ppm of mangesium hardness and 110
ppm of bicarbonate alkalinity. The filler used was calcium carbonate, and it was incorporated
into the stock at the level of 30 parts by weight of the filler, as CaCO₃, for each
70 parts by weight of dry pulp solids. The pH of this Test Stock was about 8.0 after
it was completed by the addition of cationic starch as the cationic charge-biasing
species, which is described generally above. The cationic starch had a degree of cationic
substitution ("D.S.") of about 0.01, and it was added to the cellulosic slurry in
the amount of about 20 lb. of cationic starch per ton of dry slurry solids.
Examples 1 to 7 and Comparative Examples a to f
[0079] For each of Examples 1 to 7 and Comparative Examples a to f the Test Method and Test
Stock described above were employed to determine the percent reduction in filtrate
consistency and thus retention efficacy. In Comparative Examples a through e, varying
amounts of an anionic flocculant ("AN.FLOC.") were used in the conventional manner,
that is, as Additive #2, and thus no high shear was applied to the cellulosic slurry
during or subsequent to its addition. In Comparative Example f, the same anionic flocculant
was added as in the process of the present invention, that is, as Additive #1, but
such addition was not followed by a charge of microparticle material, after the last
shear stage, as required by the present invention. Examples 1 through 3 demonstrate
the process of the present invention, using the same anionic flocculant (Additive
#1) and,as the microparticle, sodium aluminate ("Na ALUM."). Examples 4 through 7
demonstrate the process of the present invention, again using the same anionic flocculant
(Additive #1) and, as the microparticle, polyaluminum chloride ("PAC"). The anionic
flocculant used was a high molecular weight, medium charge density copolymer of acrylamide
and acrylic acid, containing about 30 mole percent acrylic acid mer units and having
an RSV of about 30 to 36. In Table 1 below each example and comparative example is
again characterized as to the materials, if any, used as Additives #1 and #2, the
dosages thereof, the filtrate consistency and the percent reduction in filtrate consistency,
in comparison to the blank. The dosages of the additives are given in terms of lb.
of additive per dry ton solids (dry slurry solids)
in the cellulosic slurry, and the dosages for sodium aluminate and polyaluminum chloride
are calculated as Al₂O₃. In Table 2, which also follows, conversions from "lb. of
additive per dry ton solids" to "parts by weight per hundred parts by weight of dry
solids" for several values are given for convenience in any conversions.

Retention
[0080] The foregoing examples, particularly in contrast to the foregoing comparative examples,
demonstrate generally that the process of the present invention provides a high degree
of retention performance, and particularly in the preferred embodiments provides unexpectly
and surprisingly a very high degree of retention at very low additive dosage levels.
Drainage and Paper Product Qualities
[0081] The process of the present invention, by virtue of its unique addition points and
sequence of additives, particularly the use of shear after anionic flocculant addition,
is believed to lead to improved drainage, improved maintenance of formation levels
at high retention levels, and other process and paper product characteristics, such
as paper product porosity. It is noted with respect to the above examples and comparative
examples that the use of sodium alumunate at a low dosage of 1.0 lb. per ton of dry
solids provided no detectable effect in comparison to the use of solely the anionic
flocculant in the manner shown in Comparative Example f.
Table 2
Additive Dosage Conversions |
lb. of additive per dry ton solids |
Pats by weight of additive per hundred parts by weight dry solids |
0.25 |
0.0125 |
0.50 |
0.025 |
1.00 |
0.050 |
2.00 |
0.100 |
5.00 |
0.250 |
10.00 |
0.500 |
30.00 |
1.500 |
Delivery to the Paper Machine
[0082] The anionic flocculant employed in the process of the present invention is readily
dispersible in aqueous medium and is easily charged to the papermaking process as
an aqueous polymer solution.